Difference between revisions of "Intestinal Adenocarcinoma"
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Intestinal tumours account for less than 10% of all tumours in dogs and cats and 22% of gastrointestinal tumours in dogs and 35% in cats. [[Intestine Proliferative - Pathology #Adenocarcinoma|Adenocardinoma]]/carcinoma is the most common malignant tumour in dogs and accounts for 17% of intestinal tumours in cats. | Intestinal tumours account for less than 10% of all tumours in dogs and cats and 22% of gastrointestinal tumours in dogs and 35% in cats. [[Intestine Proliferative - Pathology #Adenocarcinoma|Adenocardinoma]]/carcinoma is the most common malignant tumour in dogs and accounts for 17% of intestinal tumours in cats. | ||
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+ | ==Signalment== | ||
+ | * Mean age dogs: 6-9 years | ||
+ | * Mean age cats: 10-12 years | ||
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+ | ==Description== (aetiology, pathogenesis etc) | ||
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+ | |||
+ | ==Diagnosis== | ||
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+ | ==Treatment== | ||
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+ | ==Prognosis== |
Revision as of 13:29, 13 August 2009
This article is still under construction. |
Intestinal tumours account for less than 10% of all tumours in dogs and cats and 22% of gastrointestinal tumours in dogs and 35% in cats. Adenocardinoma/carcinoma is the most common malignant tumour in dogs and accounts for 17% of intestinal tumours in cats.
Signalment
- Mean age dogs: 6-9 years
- Mean age cats: 10-12 years
==Description== (aetiology, pathogenesis etc)